Powers
The powers of voivodes varied, as determined by historical precedent specific to each voivodeship. The least powerful of whom were inList
Even when a voivodeship ceased to exist after borders shifted, the office remained intact and the voivode preserved his privileges, such as the right to sit and vote in the Senate. Thus the number of voivodes increased in time, from 32 after the creation of the Commonwealth in 1569 to 37 by the time of its end in 1795. This is a list of the voivodes’ precedence sitting in the Senate of Poland. They took their seats after theSee also
* Administrative division of the Polish-Lithuanian CommonwealthReferences